Everybody's favourite zom-com-rom-dram is back!
I wonder if they can come up with another totally outrageous villain like Stephen Weber's character in season 2?
Unlike other seasons of iZombie where there was a pretty clearly defined big bad -- we kind of let our bad guys let it rip. Like full-on, mustache-twirly, go for broke. Steven Webber and David Anders got to be full-throttle bad guys -- this year is different. Those seasons ended in big shootouts. That's not our plan this year. This year it's Liv trying to figure out where she exists in a zombie vs. human world.
I was slightly disappointed that Liv didn't get a new brain/personality, but I guess they had a lot going on this ep already. Time enough for that next week, I suppose.
That's what science fiction should do -- not just use its concepts for weekly crimesolving or personal stories, but explore their larger ramifications and the changes they could bring to the world..
Not sure I ever really considered iZombie a serious science fiction show
It's interesting. Superheros and science fiction tend to clash this way. Traditionally, comics avoid the fact that their premises (aliens, shrinking rays, Norse gods hanging out in NYC) would cause profound social changes in real life, in order to have Superman and the Fantastic Four hanging out in a world that more or less resembles our own.
So I'm not sure "world-building" is really the point of a quirky comic-book adaptation.
And that's their shortcoming. It's more interesting to explore how the world is changed by a phenomenon than just to keep it all secret and limited and maintain the pretense that it's happening in the real world. That was the strength of a show like The 4400, in that the superpowers were overt and actually had an impact on the world. It was a refreshing change from the hackneyed formula where everything stays secret. And we do see this in mass-media superhero universes, too. Both the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the Arrowverse have given us worlds that have grown and evolved in response to the existence of superheroes and supervillains, that have changed in at least some ways to be different from our own world. The MCU has brought Inhumans into the open, Supergirl has alien amnesty, and stories about the impact of these new phenomena are actually being told rather than artificially avoided for the sake of an enforced status quo.
Indeed, usually in these shows where there's a subclass of people who have special abilities and are being hunted/persecuted for it -- like in Alphas or The CW's The Tomorrow People, for instance -- it's actually counterproductive for the protagonists to keep their superpowered/alien/magical/whatever nature secret, since that just gives their enemies license to act against them in the shadows. The best thing for them would be to hire a good lawyer and PR representative, go public, and assert their civil rights, garner public sympathy and expose the efforts of the government/evil organization to persecute and experiment on them. In cases like that, keeping the secret is so counterproductive for the characters that it's obviously just a contrived excuse to maintain the pretense that the show is set in our world -- which is stupid, because it obviously isn't, being a TV show and all.
Conversely, if the alien/supernatural ones are the villains, it can be deeply counterproductive for the human good guys to keep their existence secret. One example was the dreadful War of the Worlds: The Series from 1988. By keeping the return of the 1953 alien invaders a secret, the "good guys" were responsible for countless civilian casualties, because they never warned people that there were dangerous, murderous terrorists in their midst, never told them what to watch out for to protect themselves. And it was doubly stupid because it was a sequel to a movie about a completely overt, global alien invasion, yet it pretended the public had somehow forgotten about the war and the existence of aliens.
This show is actually an exception to that rule, though, because people like Vivian and Major do make a good case -- the "highly infectious, brain-eating zombies" would be met with fear and disgust and probably violence. It's good to see acknowledgment of the fact that the secret can't be kept forever, and that tension between the importance of keeping the secret and the inevitability of its exposure, and the question of what can be done to prevent a massacre when the truth does come out, is a very intelligent and interesting angle to explore, and one that's all too rarely made use of. The later seasons of Stargate SG-1 flirted with questions about the ethics of keeping the Stargate program and alien life a secret, but it didn't work very well there, because by that point, they no longer had any remotely sensible reason for keeping it secret from the general public. Earth was a major player in galactic affairs, there were tons of characters in government and industry and the like that already knew about the Stargate, so the secrecy didn't really serve any narrative purpose by then. Here, the secrecy does serve a purpose, but it's also very sensible to recognize that it can't last.
There's no reason a quirky show can't be smart too. There's a lot of potential in the show's premise, and it'd be a waste not to explore it. The long-term dangers of the existence of zombies -- both the risk of a zombie apocalypse and the risk of the well-meaning zombies who are just trying to survive being persecuted/slaughtered -- have been looming in the background of this show from the beginning. It was always clear to me that the producers were thinking about those questions. What makes the show effective is that there's this genuine undercurrent of horror beneath the surface snark and silliness, as there was with Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Although iZombie's world is a lot more focused and better thought-out than Buffy's was.
Fair enough. Although I balk a little at descriptions like "smart" or "shortcomings," which implies that a more science-fictional approach is inherently superior than other takes on the material.
And I certainly wasn't suggesting that "quirky" equals "dumb". To my mind, witty dialogue, clever plot twists, engaging characters, and grisly black humor are just "smart" as any sort of sf world-building.
Not every genre show ought to be judged by science fictional standards. SUPERMAN fails as hard science fiction. That's not a shortcoming, because superheros are a different genre with different priorities. And one genre doesn't necessarily trump another.
I agree with the principle of what you're saying, @Christopher, but it has previously been said - and, as I noted, demonstrated thanks to the preview for next week's episode, that the procedural aspects of the show are never going to be abandoned completely.
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